Seodai gave an exaggerated eye roll. That, alone, was an expression he had learned from the Vantha. Syllke had taught him so much, about life and living. About humor and fun. And though he was hardly a little social butterfly with the skills to charm anyone, he was more alive than he had ever been. And the Vantha... Well, he was damned fast. With a swallowed laugh, Seodai picked up his feet to run after his friend.
Even in running they were remarkably different. Syllke ran at things in a blind fury, expelling every ounce of his energy towards the goal. He ran across the dusty streets in the same way he ran at life; head on and without an ounce of hesitation. He poured every ounce of his spirit into whatever he took on, including this race. It was an all out burst of energy that held nothing back for the 'later'. Seodai, in contrast, was measured from the very beginning. To an outsider it may have seemed as if he would never catch up with Syllke at that pace. One foot fell in front of the other in a very precise way, almost methodical. If life was a race, he wouldn't win it by exhausting himself in the first few minutes. And so Seodai ran along behind Syllke at a steady pace, slowly gaining on his friend until at last they reached the center of town.
Here it became necessary for them to slow to a walk, lest they seem uncouth as they pushed through the people milling about. Life teemed out of the streets. Children laughed and danced about their mothers legs, chasing each other around other adults as the business of living went on. Everyone seemed to recognize Syllke, and speak to him. It was oddly inappropriate, really. Seodai had lived every moment of his life in this place and yet the visiting Vantha was clearly more socially familiar with the mass that was Denval than he was. Seodai felt the difference awkwardly, and was almost regretting that it was so. That is, until they were stopped by a familiar brown head.
Pretty girl, she was. Simple, in some ways. Brown hair and brown eyes, a coloring that indicated she spent plenty of time outdoors. She was slim, a bit curvy, and had a nice smile. She wouldn't turn heads in a bigger place, an enormous city filled with all the beauty of the world. But here, she was easy to look at.
"Seodai," she smiled, taking advantage of a brief halt. A coffin was being carried across the street, and neither he or Syllke had been fast enough to dart around the sad little processional. Seodai, having just caught up to the Vantha, dropped a hand on his shoulder. In the first days of their acquaintance he had rarely ever touched the artist, but even that seemed to be fading.
"Aria," Seodai returned, shuffling back as if in defense. How many weeks had it been since he had talked with Uncle Theo about this very girl? How long since he had harbored thoughts about those dark eyes, that silky hair. It was laughable now, he thought, to consider that he'd ever thought she was the one. Seo had been so starved for affection outside of the circle of his surrogate father's arms that he had taken her kindness and internalized it, made it into something it could never have really been. "How's your mom?"
That wasn't so awkward, right? She smiled, and someone more aware, more worldly would have recognized the expression on her face. She was clearly quite smitten with the golden farmer who was, by now, half hiding behind his Vantha friend.
"She's doing better. Thanks for the basket you brought. She loves those apricots."
The girl twisted the basket in her hands, shooting a coy smile upwards towards the taller blonde. Seodai completely missed any cues he was supposed to take.
"Ah, welcome. That was mostly... Theo..."
Seodai received a rough nudge to the ribs, and he shot a wary glance towards Syllke. His bright eyes clearly said "What?!" in response to the smooth smile Syllke offered up.
"Oh! Aria, this is Syllke." There was a thoughtful pause, and then Seodai continued, uttering a sentence he'd never had the privilege of stating before. "My friend. Syllke, this is Aria. She.. er.. she ..."
"I grew up with Seodai," she explained, stepping in to introduce herself, since Seodai was doing a rather poor job of it. "Are you new here?"
Seodai shifted his weight from one foot to the other as the two played the game of social niceties, talking to one another as if they weren't strangers, as if it wasn't hard. Both kept attempting to drag him back into the conversation, but Seodai was awkward enough to avoid it entirely and still remain innocent to his efforts. Eventually, she excused herself. The funeral procession was gone, and so Seodai spurred Syllke onwards again.
He didn't really want to dissect that encounter. Not in the middle of town, anyway.
"See you later!" Seodai called over his shoulder as he darted off again, out of the last streets of town and into the open space that led to the coast. The air was clean and crisp, cooler for the clouds that hid Syna's rays. Seodai enjoyed this sort of day almost as much as the golden ones, because impending rain only meant good things for his crops. Not so much for an outing like this, probably, but the distant rumble of thunder was quiet and lazy. Perhaps the grumbling god of the storm would give them a few hours before the inevitable downpour came.
Whether he did or did not, the fact of the matter was, Seodai was only feet from reaching the very edge of the beach. Only a few feet from winning the race. Before he could find that victory, however, a blur of Vantha pushed past him desperately, laughing all the while. Seodai hadn't realized Syllke was so close and so when that slender shoulder brushed his with some force, his next footfall was uneven and the rocky shore they had found invited Seodai downwards into it's stony embrace. He fell rather ungracefully, reaching out quickly to brace himself.
"Ow! You git..." he called out, though he was laughing after Syllke nonetheless. "You cheated!"
Seodai groaned as he picked himself up from the stony cradle, feeling a sore place on his ass that would inevitably be an ugly bruise. Worse, though, when he curled his fingers into his palm he felt moisture. A glance downwards revealed a gash where the sharp stone he'd reached for to brace himself had punctured the flesh there.
Seodai cursed. He was more annoyed with the inconvenience this would inevitably cause than he was with the pain of it, but Syllke couldn't know that. The Denvali farmer began to step all the more gingerly across the rocks, towards the place where Syllke stood catching his breath. The sight of his own blood always made him feel a bit like throwing up, and so he chose not to acknowledge it at all. The sea was too pretty, the call of the birds too inviting, and the press of friendship promised to wipe away his hardship.
"What'd we come here for?" |